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Listen to story:
https://ia600600.us.archive.org/14/items/2024-07-23-RUWS/2024_07_23_Aina_Marzia.mp3Download: mp3 (Duration: 13:42)
When the great sci-fi writer Octavia Butler wrote her seminal book, Parable of the Sower, in 1993, she imagined 15-year-old protagonist Lauren Olamina starting her Earthseed journal on July 20, 2024. That date has just passed, and, according to youth reporter Aina Marzia, Butler’s work strikes a powerful chord with Generation Z readers.
In an in-depth report for YES! Magazine, probing the source of this affinity, Marzia makes the case that Butler’s solutions to late-stage capitalism are inspiring a new generation grappling with our contemporary dystopian reality. She asks, “Is it easier to imagine the end of the world than to build a socialist framework?”
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By Rising Up With Sonali4.8
6969 ratings
Listen to story:
https://ia600600.us.archive.org/14/items/2024-07-23-RUWS/2024_07_23_Aina_Marzia.mp3Download: mp3 (Duration: 13:42)
When the great sci-fi writer Octavia Butler wrote her seminal book, Parable of the Sower, in 1993, she imagined 15-year-old protagonist Lauren Olamina starting her Earthseed journal on July 20, 2024. That date has just passed, and, according to youth reporter Aina Marzia, Butler’s work strikes a powerful chord with Generation Z readers.
In an in-depth report for YES! Magazine, probing the source of this affinity, Marzia makes the case that Butler’s solutions to late-stage capitalism are inspiring a new generation grappling with our contemporary dystopian reality. She asks, “Is it easier to imagine the end of the world than to build a socialist framework?”
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